Linus Pauling — "I believe that every problem has a solution, and that we should never give up on…"
I believe that every problem has a solution, and that we should never give up on finding it.
I believe that every problem has a solution, and that we should never give up on finding it.
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"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing."
"Vitamin C is the most important of all vitamins."
"The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible."
"The only thing that stands between a man and what he wants from life is often merely the will to try it and the faith to believe that it is possible."
"The greatest adventure is to live your dreams."
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Every challenge, no matter how intractable it appears, has an answer waiting to be discovered. Persistence is not optional — abandoning the search for a solution is itself a failure. This is a commitment to optimism grounded in effort: the world is fundamentally solvable, and the only real defeat is stopping the inquiry before the answer emerges.
Pauling embodied this belief across two Nobel Prizes — Chemistry in 1954 for chemical bonding theory, and Peace in 1962 for anti-nuclear activism. When the scientific establishment dismissed his campaign against nuclear testing, he persisted for over a decade. His vitamin C megadose research continued despite medical skepticism. He treated both molecular structure and geopolitical catastrophe as problems demanding rigorous, tireless solutions.
Pauling's career spanned the Cold War nuclear arms race, when humanity faced genuine existential threats. Scientists were newly confronted with the consequences of their discoveries — atomic weapons, chemical warfare, environmental contamination. His era demanded that researchers ask not just 'can we?' but 'should we, and how do we fix what we've broken?' The solvability of problems was both a scientific and moral necessity.
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